Information

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Status

Home universe

Alter ego

Actor

Cecil Adams (died November 20, 2013), self-styled Count Vertigo and formerly known as the Count, was the dealer and creator of a drug called Vertigo. He received his original nickname because his first customers, or "victims", were left with a mark by the injection of the drug on their neck, shaped like a vampire's bite. Cecil Adams was killed by Oliver Queen as the drug dealer tried to murder Felicity Smoak. Werner Zytle would later take up his mantle under the name "Vertigo".

Contents

Biography

Born Cecil Adams, the man who would one day be known as Count Vertigo, entrenched himself in the underworld of Starling City. To perfect his prize project, the Vertigo drug, Cecil kidnapped at least fifty-six people, mostly prostitutes and vagrants, before injecting the experimental drug in them with his signature double-needle syringe. The corpses would be found with a double puncture marks on their neck. Cecil was given the nickname "The Count" in reference to the fictional vampire Count Dracula.[1]

Rise and fall

After perfecting his drug The Count was able to give it a wide circulation in the The Glades.[2]

When the Hood found out that his sister had been dealt Vertigo, he headed out for revenge. Cecil Adams sent his men out to slow down the vigilante. However, in the end, the Hood gave him a taste of his own medicine and injected him with considerable amounts of his own drug, an amount doctors have never seen anyone live through before. He was strapped to a gurney and wheeled off into a hospital, declared insane.[1]

Dr. Webb tried to take the mantle of the Vertigo crime lord for himself.

Later on it was revealed that Dr. Webb, who was in charge of treating Cecil Adams as a mental ward patient, began selling Vertigo on the street, framing Cecil Adams for it. He intended to fake his patient's escape from the mental hospital, and used Cecil kidney report to reverse engineer the Vertigo drug. He also upgraded the original formula. His plan failed when the Hood found Cecil in the basement and was told by Dr. Webb himself that Cecil Adams was not sane, and unable to run any sort of criminal operation. The Hood did not kill Cecil Adams instead sending him back to the mental hospital.[3]

Revenge and death

Ultimately, it was revealed that Cecil recovered from his overdose on Vertigo, and was sent to Iron Heights. He escaped from prison during The Undertaking. It is revealed that Cecil let Barton Mathis out, another criminal that likes to kill his victims with a liquid, and dress them up as pretty dolls. Six months later, he returned calling himself "Count Vertigo". Once again, he put Vertigo out on the street and poisoned almost the entire city with it, by using flu injection vans throughout the city. He even managed to infect Adam Donner and John Diggle. Felicity Smoak, the person that found his delivering method, was taken hostage by Cecil Adams when she came to investigate. He was able to put the pieces together, and figured out that Oliver Queen is the vigilante. Cecil Adams called Oliver from Oliver's office at Queen Consolidated, and informed him that he abducted Felicity. After Oliver arrived, he tried to talk the Count out of harming Felicity. When Cecil threatened to inject Felicity with Vertigo, Oliver killed him with three arrows to the chest, which caused him to fall through the window where he landed on top of a car parked next to the building. Cecil Adams death caused many to believe The Arrow has started killing people once again, an assumption that was proven wrong. Soon, it is revealed that Cecil Adams was sent to kill the Arrow by Sebastian Blood.[4]

Legacy

Werner Zytle continued the legacy of Count Vertigo.

The Count's mantle was soon taken by another crime lord under the moniker of "Vertigo", Werner Zytle. Zytle defeated other members of Vertigo's criminal organization and started spreading the drug along with means to affect great masses of people with it.[5]

Personality

Cecil was psychopathic, sadistic, ruthless, unreasonable, and a person who took great pleasure in seeing people suffer, but after he was injected by his own drug Vertigo by the Arrow, he became a shell of his former self. However, when he returned as "Count Vertigo", his personality was restored.

Powers and abilities

Powers

Vertigo immunity: Developing immunity to Vetrigo as he was developing the drug itself, Cecil managed to survive being injected with a nearly lethal dose of the drug, also being able to gradually restore his mind after the overdose.[4]

Abilities

Chemistry: Cecil was very profficient in chemistry and biochemistry as evidenced by him being able to develop Vertigo on his own with minimal resources.[1]

High intellect/Deduction: Cecil was known to be very smart and was one of the fewer people to deduce the connection between Oliver Queen and The Hood, eventually discovering that they're one and the same.[4]

Basic marksmanship/Firearms: Cecil was able to profficiently use a handgun.[4]

Equipment

Double syringe: As The Count, he carried a distinctive syringe with two needles filled with liquid Vertigo . He could stab victims in the neck or chest with it and force the vertigo into them. The vertigo would inflict effects ranging from disorientation to severe pain.[1] After escaping prison and setting up a new enterprise, he demonstrated the ability to kill a person merely by stabbing them in the shoulder. The overdose would take effect in mere seconds.[4]

Handgun: Cecil often carried at least one pistol on hand. He used it in his last skirmish with Oliver Queen until he ran out of bullets.[4]

Behind the scenes

In the DC comics, Count Vertigo, whose real name was Werner Vertigo, had the ability to disorient his victims using a chip planted in his skull, which is manifested in Arrow as the drug called Vertigo. In The New 52, the event that rebooted the DC Universe in the DC Comics, Count Vertigo's new name was Werner Zytle.

Before the premiere of the second season ofArrow, Gabel stated that despite Arrow promising he didn't kill his foes, the chance of the Count's death wasn't impossible. The Count was finally killed in "State v. Queen", as Gabel suspected a little.[6]